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Comparative Effects of Ambient Ultraviolet-B Radiation on Two Sympatric Species of Australian Frogs
Authors:Sara D. Broomhall,William S. Osborne,&dagger   and,Ross B. Cunningham&Dagger  
Affiliation:Biological Sciences A08, University of Sydney, 2006, Australia, email; Applied Ecology Research Group, University of Canberra, Australian Capital Territory, 2601, Australia; Statistical Consulting Unit, Australian National University, Australian Capital Territory, 0200, Australia
Abstract:Abstract: Declines have been observed in a number of Australian frog species, many of these at high elevations. Alpine regions in Australia are likely to be particularly subject to increases in ultraviolet-B radiation ( UV-B, 280–320 nm) because UV-B levels increase with elevation and because anthropogenic depletion of ozone has been particularly severe in the southern hemisphere. We compared survivorship of embryos and tadpoles of a declining species of frog, Litoria verreauxii alpina , with those of a sympatric nondeclining species, Crinia signifera , under three ambient UV-B treatments, unshielded, control, and UV-B–excluding. Experiments were conducted in artificial water bodies established at three different elevations (1365, 1600, and 1930 m) in the Snowy Mountains of southeastern Australia. The exclusion of UV-B significantly enhanced survival of L. v. alpina (declining species) at all elevations. Overall, the probability of dying was highest in the unshielded treatments and lowest under the UV-B–excluding treatment for both species over all elevations. The probability of dying was significantly higher in L. v. alpina than in C. signifera for a given UV-B treatment at the two highest elevations. Our results support the hypothesis that ultraviolet radiation is likely to be a contributing factor in the disappearance of L. v. alpina at high elevations in southern Australia.
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